Originally posted by cloughie
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Proms classical?
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostYou don't seem too keen to offer such a definition yourself....
"World Music" at the Proms goes back to at least 2002, but has become a somewhat discredited term...
Artists, record labels and even this month’s Womad festival agree that the term is outdated. Is there a better way to market music from across the globe?
But as I've implied above, PhilpT's list of composers and musical genres - Mahler, Bruckner, Messiaen (all of whom have featured regularly in recent seasons - just browse through the reviews and comments on earlier Proms seasons on this very forum) and Indian Ragas and so on, are closely mirrored by the range of Classical (howsoever you define it) and other genres this very year....
Remember that this is a shorter season than usual, and there are no orchestras visiting from abroad. So choices could have been a bit restricted...
But take a look at the final two weeks - Arnold's 5th with Walton, an all-Bartok night (with a Hungarian folk band), Knussen and Benjamin, a complete Tristan, JEG with Handel and Bach, Berg and Korngold, J Strauss II and Richard Strauss, Hindemith, Messiaen , Rautavaara, Saint-Saens' organ blockbuster, a complete Matthew Passion.....and more premieres...
And Rattle in town tomorrow with a symphonic Stravinsky trilogy....
Not so bad, is it?
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Originally posted by PhilipT View PostI fail to see what the Proms offers now to someone like I was 30 years ago.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by hmvman View PostHmm, sort of agree but there are grey areas though, aren't there? A friend of mine refused to categorise Gershwin as 'classical' so 'Rhapsody in Blue', in his book, wasn't a classical piece.
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Originally posted by hmvman View PostHmm, sort of agree but there are grey areas though, aren't there? A friend of mine refused to categorise Gershwin as 'classical' so 'Rhapsody in Blue', in his book, wasn't a classical piece.
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostYes absolutely but if you pigeon hole the music rather than the composer then Rhapsody in Blue, PC, Am in Paris are classical but nis songs are non-classical. Did he write opera (classical) and musicals (non-classical) yes. Summertime sung as part of the opera - classical. Summertime sung by The Zombies - non-classical. My decisions are often made on where I will put them on the shelves or in my index.
Completely agree with you, Heldenleben, regarding RiB.
I suppose my point was that it's difficult to put an absolute definition of 'classical music', especially in terms of what should be included in The Proms. I enjoy hearing the old warhorses when they're trotted out but I also very much enjoy being surprised by something new and different, regardless of genre.
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Originally posted by Cockney Sparrow View PostSo I presume that (ref Cloughie above) there is general support for Porgy and Bess making it over the line to take its place between Humperdink, Gilbert & sullivan (or Gluck) on the CD shelves?
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